ANTWONE FISHER
This Antwone Fisher (Derek Luke) is some guy. His father was murdered before he
was born. His mother gave him up for adoption to a woman who -- as the film
indicates in flashbacks -- beat him, tried to make him feel worthless, and
exposed him to sexual abuse by a babysitter. Now a Navy seaman, Antwone has a
temper and gets into fights. He lands in the office of a fatherly psychiatrist
(Denzel Washington) who helps him acquire self-esteem, a better attitude, a
perfect girlfriend, and the determination to seek his biological mother.
Based on the real Antwone Fisher's autobiographical screenplay and
straightforwardly directed by Washington, this old-fashioned after-school
special benefits from sincerity and from a good performance by Luke. The film
also has its awkwardnesses (like the mining of the psychiatrist's troubled
marriage for a rather arbitrary subplot), a certain lack of tension (Antwone is
so wonderful that the outcome of his contest with his demons is never in
question), and the usual liberal-drama implication that the face of a social
problem can't be seen unless someone "like us" looks at it. (120 minutes)
Opens Friday at the Entertainment, Flagship and Showcase Seekonk 1-10.
Issue Date: January 10 - 16, 2003
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